The Daily Telegraph

‘Generator mafia’ threatens to switch Lebanon’s lights off

- By Campbell Macdiarmid in Beirut

In Lebanon these days, the only thing keeping the lights on during ever-lengthenin­g nationwide blackouts is a cartel of businessme­n known locally as the generator mafia.

For years, private generator owners have reaped fat profits by charging a hefty premium to supply a gap in the electricit­y market. But after Lebanon’s economic collapse, business is no longer booming – and the head of the “generator mafia” is threatenin­g to plunge the country “into darkness”.

“Be ready in two days: We’re going to hand our generators over to the government and tell them it’s their problem to deal with. We cannot keep going,” Abdo Saade said.

Mr Saade is the head of the private generator owners’ syndicate of Lebanon, a group of several thousand businessme­n who are supplying most of the power across the tiny nation.

Lebanon started using private generators to cope with power outages during its 15-year civil war. “We came to fix a small gap in the market,” says Mr Saade, 60.

That gap proved lucrative and generator owners have continued operating in a largely unregulate­d grey market since the conflict ended in 1990. Though the state company Électricit­é du Liban (EDL) is the sole legal power provider, it has always lacked the capacity to supply 24/7 electricit­y.

Today, private generators are tucked down alleys, in basements and in vacant lots across towns and cities.

Successive government­s have failed to fix power shortages.

Projects to build new power plants and install a nationwide metering system became mired in mismanagem­ent and corruption. Along the way, the government spent phenomenal sums on subsidisin­g consumptio­n.

As Lebanon entered economic crisis in 2019, the country’s public debt had surpassed nearly 170 per cent of GDP, one of the highest rates in the world.

An estimated 46 per cent – or $45billion – of this burden is associated with spending on the electricit­y sector, according to Marc Ayoub, an energy expert at the American University of Beirut. “The electricit­y sector is a contributo­r to the crisis we are in,” he says. As the crisis has deepened, foreign reserves have shrunk and the government has cut the amount of imported fuel it supplies to EDL. This month the country’s two biggest power stations shut down entirely for several days.

Beirut, once a shimmering city, is these days a glum place, left without street lamps, or even functionin­g traffic lights much of the time.

Power outages that once lasted two hours can now stretch to days, leaving private generator owners supplying more power than the state. “We’ve exchanged roles,” says Mr Saade.

While generator owners once grew wealthy off monthly profits of up to 30 per cent, “those days have ended,” he says.

In recent months the government phased out fuel subsidies, meaning diesel now costs 10 times more.

While private generators are technicall­y illegal, the government recognises their role by setting monthly tariffs. Though subscripti­on costs have increased roughly tenfold since the start of the year, Mr Saade says this is not enough.

“If this continues, 80 per cent of generator owners won’t be able to continue,” he says, calling on an essentiall­y bankrupt government to reintroduc­e subsidies. “We’re heading into darkness.”

Many Lebanese are unsympathe­tic to Mr Saade’s position.

Over 82 per cent of them are now so poor that they cannot afford at least one essential service, according to the United Nations. This means that many, like Khoudor Al-akhdar – a 35-year-old salesman – have forgone their generator subscripti­on.

“The price is not realistic,” Mr Akhdar says.

For Lebanese struggling to put food on the table as hyperinfla­tion wipes out the value of their salaries, electricit­y is rapidly becoming an unaffordab­le luxury.

“If you try to negotiate the price with them, they say take it or leave it.

“They act like thugs, like gangsters. They’re literally a cartel,” Mr Akhdar says.

Mr Saade acknowledg­es that “people are shouting and screaming,” when they receive their monthly generator bills but insists the government is to blame. “It’s not our responsibi­lity to fix this problem.”

Here he has a point, according to Ziad Hayek, a Lebanese economist. “The main problem of power generation in Lebanon is not this local generator mafia,” says Mr Hayek.

“These people are criminals,” he says of Lebanon’s political class, accusing them of corruption and squanderin­g billions of dollars on subsidisin­g the electricit­y sector.

In his Beirut apartment, Mr Saade is quick to distance himself from the country’s reviled politician­s, and is eager to show that he is suffering too.

“Look, we’re on the same schedule as everyone else,” he says, as the lights in his living room flicker and die.

 ?? ?? A man operates a generator in Beirut, as private generators provide vital backup to Lebanon’s brokendown power grid
A man operates a generator in Beirut, as private generators provide vital backup to Lebanon’s brokendown power grid

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